| Literature DB >> 35897912 |
Marta Igual1, Patricia García-Herrera2, Rosa M Cámara2, Javier Martínez-Monzó1, Purificación García-Segovia1, Montaña Cámara2.
Abstract
Rosa canina pseudo-fruits contain interesting bioactive compounds. This work aims to evaluate the use of different biopolymers as encapsulating agents on the content of organic acids, minerals, fibers, phenols, carotenoids, and the antioxidant activity of the powdered product. Fruits were ground and freeze-dried with or without biopolymers (maltodextrin, resistant maltodextrin, cyclodextrin, and pea protein). Rosehip formulated purees with encapsulating agents are an interesting food ingredient rich in fiber and minerals that could be used in the food industry in order to obtain different functional foods. Results obtained in this study show that all formulated samples are a good source of potassium, calcium, magnesium, and manganese. Both rosehip without biopolymers and rosehip with pea protein formulations are also a good source of Zn. Formulation with pea protein can be claimed as a good source of Fe. All formulations are food ingredients with a very high content of ascorbic acid. Comparing the encapsulating agents, depending on the studied bioactive compound samples behaved differently. In conclusion, it can be indicated that pea protein is recommended as an encapsulating agent since the rosehip with pea protein sample has the highest content of fiber, minerals, organic acids, and carotenoids among the encapsulating agents studied.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant capacity; bioactive compounds; encapsulation; rosehip
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897912 PMCID: PMC9331951 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27154737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Rosehips of Rosa canina and lengthwise section fruit.
Mean values (and standard deviations) of water content in g water/100 g (Xw puree), Brix degree and pH of puree, and water content in g water/100 g (Xw powder) of formulated rose hip purees and powders.
| Puree Samples | Freeze-Dried Samples | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | Xw Puree | Brix Degrees | pH | Xw Powder |
| R | 88.00 (0.06) a | 11.87 (0.20) c | 3.76 (0.02) c | 2.48 (0.01) a |
| MDR | 80.08 (0.02) c | 21.27 (0.22) a | 3.78 (0.02) c | 2.16 (0.08) b |
| RMDR | 79.73 (0.03) d | 21.17 (0.21) a | 3.76 (0.02) c | 2.15 (0.04) b |
| CDR | 80.34 (0.12) b | 12.00 (0.20) c | 3.84 (0.02) b | 1.80 (0.07) c |
| PPR | 80.38 (0.26) b | 16.10 (0.20) b | 4.57 (0.02) a | 0.86 (0.03) d |
The same letter in superscript within column indicates homogeneous groups established by ANOVA (p < 0.05). R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Figure 2Insoluble/soluble fiber ratio in samples analyzed. R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Mean values (and standard deviations) of insoluble, soluble, and total fiber content of rosehip formulated samples (g/100 g).
| Sample | Insoluble Fiber | Soluble Fiber | Total Fiber |
|---|---|---|---|
| R | 17.12 (0.26) d | 10.11 (0.00) e | 27.13 (0.09) d |
| MDR | 12.61 (0.53) c | 3.42 (0.34) b | 16.03 (0.55) b |
| RMDR | 8.03 (0.65) a | 2.81 (0.06) a | 10.35 (0.75) a |
| CDR | 10.02 (0.46) b | 6.68 (0.19) c | 16.70 (0.57) b |
| PPR | 17.86 (0.66) d | 8.01 (0.06) d | 25.87 (0.66) c |
The same letter in superscript within column indicates homogeneous groups established by ANOVA (p < 0.05). R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Mean values (and standard deviations) of main macro and microelements (mg/100 g) in formulated rosehip samples.
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| R | nd | 1733.5 (19.1) d | 534.5 (15.8) b | 257.0 (3.2) c |
| MDR | nd | 1167.8 (8.0) a | 331.0 (10.1) a | 184.7 (1.6) a |
| RMDR | nd | 1307.7 (72.3) bc | 329.2 (2.8) a | 183.5 (2.0) a |
| CDR | nd | 1241.9 (69.8) ab | 317.2 (8.8) a | 187.9 (2.9) a |
| PPR | nd | 1356.8 (11.2) c | 316.7 (1.7) a | 217.2 (6.1) b |
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| R | 7.39 (0.36) c | 0.74 (0.00) b | 0.24 (0.02) a | 2.16 (0.12) c |
| MDR | 4.37 (0.64) a | 0.59 (0.07) ab | 1.78 (0.27) c | 0.54 (0.03) a |
| RMDR | 5.33 (0.16) b | 0.39 (0.02) a | 1.02 (0.03) b | 1.43 (0.09) b |
| CDR | 4.96 (0.07) ab | 0.51 (0.01) ab | 0.62 (0.02) ab | 1.23 (0.14) b |
| PPR | 5.04 (0.42) ab | 1.52 (0.17) c | 6.05 (0.43) d | 3.68 (0.26) d |
The same letter in superscript within column indicates homogeneous groups established by ANOVA (p < 0.05). R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Mean values (and standard deviations) of main organic acids (g/100 g).
| Sample | Quinic | Malic | Ascorbic | Citric | Fumaric |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R | 0.68 (0.01) d | 1.55 (0.07) d | 0.44 (0.02) d | 6.05 (0.24) c | 0.175 (0.001) b |
| MDR | 0.50 (0.00) b | 1.07 (0.01) ab | 0.25 (0.02) a | 4.08 (0.06) ab | 0.171 (0.008) ab |
| RMDR | 0.49 (0.01) b | 1.10 (0.04) b | 0.37 (0.02) c | 4.08 (0.13) ab | 0.172 (0.003) ab |
| CDR | 0.45 (0.04) a | 0.98 (0.07) a | 0.37 (0.02) c | 3.74 (0.41) a | 0.166 (0.003) ab |
| PPR | 0.58 (0.02) c | 1.26 (0.05) c | 0.31 (0.03) b | 4.24 (0.08) b | 0.165 (0.003) a |
The same letter in the superscript within column indicates homogeneous groups established by ANOVA (p < 0.05). R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Mean values (and standard deviations) of total carotenoids (TC), total phenols (TP) content, and antioxidant capacity (AC).
| Sample | TC (mgβ-carotene/100 g) | TP (mgGAE/100 g) | AC (mgTE/100 g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| R | 74.4 (0.2) a | 2482 (8) a | 1793 (9) a |
| MDR | 24.43 (0.03) d | 1275 (4) b | 955 (7) b |
| RMDR | 24.32 (0.12) d | 1220 (4) c | 928 (4) c |
| CDR | 28.4 (0.2) c | 628 (8) e | 607 (13) e |
| PPR | 45.9 (0.2) b | 799 (4) d | 712 (10) d |
The same letter in superscript within column indicates homogeneous groups established by ANOVA (p < 0.05). R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Figure 3–HPLC-UV organic acid profile of rosehip sample.
Figure 4Mean values and standard deviation of encapsulation efficiencies percentage in rosehip freeze-dried formulated samples for total phenols and antioxidant capacity. Letters indicate homogeneous groups established by the ANOVA (p < 0.05) for total phenols and antioxidant capacity. R: rosehip; MDR: maltodextrin rosehip; RMDR: resistant maltodextrin rosehip; CDR: cyclodextrin rosehip; PPR: pea protein rosehip.
Figure 5Scheme of rosehip powders obtaining.